1. What did Southey think of the New Lanark children's precision drilling?
He thought of what T. Vardon had told him about the cows in Holland. When the cows are taken to shelter, Dutch prevent them from dirtying their tails by tying them and the consequence is that when a cow wags its tail, the others must do it too. He thought that the puppet-like movement of the children were like the water wheel of the Cotton-Mills.
2. According to Southey, why was New Lanark like a plantation?
He said that New Lanark was like a plantation because the persons under Robert Owen’s control were white and free to go whenever they wanted to, but if they decided to stay, they were like any negro-slaves.
3. What contradictions did Southey note in Owen's system of social organization? Do you agree with Southey? Why or Why not?
The contradictions Southey noted in Owen’s system of social organization was that Owen considered his workers as human machines and that Owen expected all mankind would be governed by the same principles of The New Lanark. Southey mentions that Owen hid from others and from himself believing that his system looked for perfect freedom but with the high price of being kept by absolute power.
I agree with Southey because Owen, by his principles, intended to destroy all character and individuality, which is the power of human society.
the Bay of Pigs Invasion
the Korean War
the Vietnam War
Answer:
the 1st option
Explanation:
i just took the test
Answer:
Encouraging discontent among the colonists
Explanation:
On Off
Assessment items
Box with Group A and Group B. Group A lists Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida. Group B lists Arkansas, Maryland, North Carolina, Missouri
Box with quote, . . . . that this nation - shall have a new birth of freedom - and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.
Graph showing how many Americans died during the Civil War broken down by battle-related deaths, disease-related deaths, total deaths by side, total deaths in the Civil War, Total Americans deaths in all other U S wars combined, 1775-1991
Item 32
What rights were not guaranteed to all African Americans by the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution?
equal protection under the law
voting
due process
full citizenship
Answer:the answer is voting
Explanation:the 14th didnt give them the right to vote the 15th amendment gave them the right to vote
The Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S Constitution granted equal protection under the law, due process, and full citizenship to all, but it did not guarantee the right to vote to African Americans. This right was later established by the Fifteenth Amendment.
The Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S Constitution, ratified in 1868, granted several critical rights to all U.S citizens, regardless of race. It mandated equal protection under the law, due process, and full citizenship to everyone, including African Americans. However, it did not specifically guarantee the right to vote. The right to vote for African Americans was later explicitly established by the Fifteenth Amendment, ratified in 1870.
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Government refers to a group of people who has the power or control to rule a state, territory or country.
The functions of government includes:
Read more:
Answer:
A government's basic functions are providing leadership, maintaining order, providing public services, providing national security, providing economic security, and providing economic assistance.
Explanation:
Citizens in Berlin began to tear down the Berlin Wall soon after because it was a symbol of the Cold War and the division between East and West Germany.
The Berlin Wall was constructed by the German Democratic Republic during the Cold War to stop its inhabitants from fleeing Soviet-controlled East Berlin to West Berlin, which was governed by the main Western Allies.
The Berlin Wall had been erected by the East German government in 1961 to prevent citizens from fleeing to the West, and it was heavily guarded and fortified with barbed wire, guard towers, and armed patrols.
In November 1989, after weeks of protests and demonstrations in East Germany, the government announced that citizens would be allowed to travel freely to the West. In response, crowds of citizens gathered at the Berlin Wall and began tearing it down, brick by brick.
The scenes of citizens from both sides of the Wall coming together and celebrating the end of the division between East and West Germany became iconic images of the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War.
Learn more about the Berlin Wall here:
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East Germany opened its borders